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Show Here Are Boat Care 1 Se Genser 2 YY) yy] Bure 7 Player, Rh Wilson, ~ For 1978 ES __0PP TOTALS: 4 SCORING Player, Pos. TD PAT 2 pt FL r Duke, K Thompson, TE Cnristensen, FB VanDerWouden, SE GourTey, TB Harris, SE Younger, Wingard, Anderson, TE Wilson, QB Phillips, TB Team BYU TOTALS: OPP TOTALS: eg otal ao 5-10 saa nu 0-0 az Be 30 0-0 9-0 24 ae 0-0 ie PUNTING No. ‘layer. LS: 43 A *S 6 9-0 M Larry Miller, WLB 0-0 (5 a Ross Varner, DE John Neal, WS 0-0 2 ee Ava, Yards McMahon ti oO. YU TOTALS: 20 o NoPPGuryrALe aa3 Teas seas3 10 1647 F Player, Pos. Jason Coloma, $$ i From ALL The Top Brands! 1647 38 dynastear ‘Ppylsar’ High performance compact with Gary Peterson, OT 5-1 2-5 *185 narrow sidecut for quick turning and maximum carving. Polyethylene racing base 160, 170, 180, 190 cm Bob Prested, LC Rod Wood, Danny Frazier, | l LO New ‘Comp710’ Extremely quick-turning with a low neutral axis to give suppleness and dampness without the need for a cracked edge. 180 to 200 cm Bob Prested, Jason Coloma, SS WS *210 the ski” ‘New for’78 Cracked edges combined with chamfer dampeners give superb OPP TOTAL performances on hard, °235 uneven ZObs-«diWOO terrain with better edge control 170-205 cm. What Happened To The Reds? For the Cincinnati Reds, a dramaticallydifferent ballclub in 1977 than in 1976, numerousplayer shuffles produced somegains, some losses. Various observers have formed various opinions about the overall result, but two facts go undisputed ~ the 1976 version of the Reds won the world championship, the 1977 cast didn’t A look at what happened in 1977 to the former and the new Reds produces some interesting comparisons First, Gullett, the ace of the pitching staff, took a free agent jump to the new world champion New York Yankees at the end of the 1976 season. The Reds, of course, got nothing in exchange for Gullett except somefinancial savings. . Gullett, despite someinjuries, had a sparkling 14 record for the Yanks. The Reds certainly could have used that kind of performance. Ciney got that kind of record, 14-3, from Seaver he came over from the New York Mets, butit was not enough. The Reds gave up several playersto get Tom Ter. c, but the deal has not yet appeared overlycostly Zachry, Doug Flynn, Steve Henderson and Dan in went over to the Mets. Zachry, despite being National League co-Rookie f the Year for the Redsin '76, was only 10-13 with a 2 ed run average in °77. Flynn, who didn't play gularly for the Reds but was used extensively by the Mets, hit only .197 with no homers andjust 19 RBI but Perez continuedto clout for Montreal 283 and driving in 91 runs. Along with Perez eds sent the Expos lefty reliever Will »y, who posted a halfway decent 3.93 ERAin sure DryRTC and cut-out Super comfortable boot, 5-9. sole. s \£ AV / inner /\— New, Neumann & Bennett 747’ Giant Field Fas rake Nowax* base M-L Nowax-Base Cross-Country Skis Canadian Honker Floater Decoys at i 77 Field-Stake Decoys Our Reg Kile trakk ‘seeteld’ Xx G H Stretch Pant Fiberglass construction with the famous fishscale ‘No-Wax’ base 9 950 the most effective no-wax base Neumann & Bennett Full Bodied $-10 Duck Decoys Dur Reg 37°, 6°°../69".. | made. White with light and dark ' blue trim. In all lengths A very practical, ex flattering stretch pant in 45% tremely I Woo! St ame through. Driessen batted 300, hit 17 homers ad Polargard of the year exchange for Perez, the Reds got pitchers Fryman and Dale Murray. Fryman quit hrough the season and Murray although he recordin relief, had a 4.4 ERA. past Perez’ replacement, Danny Driessen. 91 RBIs. Driessen also stole 31 bases, compared erez’ four, andplayedalot betterfirst base jome critics expected Duck ~ CARBY-LITE Decoys ~ or) 25% Lighter Than er Sparky Anderson complained that his good re signs than he could believe s or bad, Anderson refused to a lack ‘ee for not winning another world chamnionehin Cross-Country Boot with snow collar, Oz, Mallard A grooved soles ar rced pin area Nordic 95 \;; Ski Vest Fleece-Lined 59° Double-laced. over-ankle tourin: Rawly Eastwick, unloadedto St. Louis after a spat s debatable. But, there were other factors too Insulated Alfa . Other Molded Decoys! with Reds officials, only had a 5-9 record and a 3.90 ERA this season, but heis young and could rebound, possibly haunting Cincy Joug Capilla, who came over to the Reds for astwick, was 7-8, with a 4.46 ERA All told, there wereboth pluses and minusesin the personnel moves. How muchthey helped or 49% Nylon, 6° 29%. jidn't have an effective southpaw reliever In SORE SD my 4 improved fitting sys- tem stiff where they need to be, flexible where they're supposed to be. S- Big Mother Goose = 109%. | Ni a \ 190” Cea euH Ne oH ; Canadian Honker ge ¢ \ SCOTT ‘Superlite’ Goose and ea up with a .297 batting average. Norman is still the Perez trade didn't gave up on the popular first sacker because 75.00. Injection molded T.P. shell with floating cuff, metal heel protector, cable clo- ie jerson did have a good year for the Mets and lassified as ‘promising So, in 1977 at least, the Seaver deal looked good for e Reds New ‘Vogue’ 7 CINCINNATI (UPI) — The TonyPerez deal was a bust. The Tom Seaver trade was a winner The loss of Don Gullett hurt. The departure of Doug Flynn didn't. XH| oO NORDICA Ladies’ 29°" . 33° Men's and Women’s sizes WADUAES sumerLn 1290 S$. STATE OREM SKIING! |